You can use webpack, which will give you ES6 imports and UMD, take a look at how it was done in this project (you can skip the babel configuration in the gulpfile if not needed).
https://github.com/emerinohdz/power-alt-tab Thanks. El vie., 9 de nov. de 2018 8:22 a. m., Andrea Giammarchi via javascript-list <javascript-list@gnome.org> escribió: > if you are familiar with CommonJS, I suggest you to use cgjs > > https://github.com/cgjs/cgjs#cgjs-- > > it's not really a 1:1 nodejs replica when it comes to core modules, but at > least it doesn't require you to learn a module system that only GJS uses > and that will inevitably fade away as soon as ES2015 static, or even > dynamic import, will be introduced. > > Feel free to see the circus around configuring folders and imports > otherwise directly via GJS. > > On Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 5:18 PM Tony Houghton <h...@realh.co.uk> wrote: > >> gjs has attracted my attention, but the tutorials and examples are rather >> simple so I can't work out what you're supposed to do to make an >> application with multiple source files. Do you have to write a script to >> concatenate them in the right order, or >> can you use Javascript's import keyword? >> >> -- >> TH >> >> _______________________________________________ >> javascript-list mailing list >> javascript-list@gnome.org >> https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/javascript-list >> > _______________________________________________ > javascript-list mailing list > javascript-list@gnome.org > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/javascript-list >
_______________________________________________ javascript-list mailing list javascript-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/javascript-list